This thought provoking art exhibit is on for one day only in Vancouver

Just like an Instagram story disappears in 24 hours … so will this Vancouver artist’s exhibit.

Sára Molčan, known for her exploration of how social media penetrates daily existence, is set to launch her latest thought provoking art series.

The one-day exhibit, LOVE/MADNESS, examines the relationship between social media, love, identity, trauma and our constant want for attention.

Vancouver artist Sára Molčan. Photo courtesy of Sára Molčan.

Molčan captures the universal desire to be liked through large-scale oil paintings and ads an extra layer of excitement with augmented reality. Viewers will be able to pan their phone over certain artworks to unlock animations and pop-ups, which further push the story behind her work.

“The show touches on our want to exist as much as wanting to be seen by someone,” Molčan told Vancouver Is Awesome.

Using herself as her muse, the artwork confronts how people curate and edit their lives on social media to appeal to audiences.

“I’m always trying to tell a story,” Molčan said.

“With the 16 paintings that I’m debuting there are a few stories. It’s almost like an ensemble movie where I’m the only visible cast member. As much as I am my own muse, my life is my muse and it involves so many other people and it involves society in general. So it’s me, but it is also everyone.”

She takes experiences from the digital world and recreates them in analogue format – including Snapchat snaps, Instagram stories, selfies, texting, and sexting.

“My work is quite photo realistic now,” Molčan said. “I take text messages and paint them – they are not real conversations but they are meant to be universal.

“The most common feedback I get is: ‘ I feel like you stole something out of my phone.’

“It’s proof that it’s universal how relationships have shifted into this format where we rely on technology to communicate so much that it becomes a universal experience.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BqauQC_nMOh/

Molčan has gone through somewhat of a personal journey through her art, sharing more about herself and her personal struggles with each exhibition.

In her earlier work, she expressed her emotions through distorted images.

“I would paint the figure and then I would cover up the face. A lot of that had to do with not really understanding or being comfortable with who I am,” Molčan explained.

“Instead of ever painting myself or anything that represented me, I tried to channel my emotions through paint in a different way. But it really wasn’t as fulfilling as telling my own story.”

In her 2018 exhibition, Casually Indifferent, Molčan explored how trauma changes the way a person interacts with other people and the way people present themselves to the world through social media.

“For me, I came out of a very abusive relationship that I was in for nine years,” Molčan said.

“So it was a culmination of taking a closer look at how I interact with people and why, but also, it was addressing the combination of wanting everything to appear like it is perfect, while in fact it is not.”

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